Adaptation.
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:37:00
Hey, Amelia!
:37:01
Hey, Donald.
Hey, Charlie.

:37:05
- Hey. Hi there.
- God, Amelia, we don't see you anymore.

:37:10
- It's good to see you.
- This is my girlfriend, Caroline.

:37:13
- She's a makeup artist for the movies.
- Hi.

:37:17
Hi.
:37:19
This is David, my friend.
:37:22
- Hi.
- Hey. Nice to meet you.

:37:24
- Amelia's talked a lot about you.
- Hi, I'm Donald.

:37:26
- Hey.
- Caroline.

:37:29
- Cool camera.
- So how are you?

:37:31
- You know me, a mess.
- Charlie...

:37:34
...it's really good to see you.
Is the work good?

:37:37
It's a disaster.
I don't know what I'm doing.

:37:39
But, anyway, it's my problem.
I don't want to bore you.

:37:42
You have your own stuff, right? I mean,
we both have our own separate stuff.

:37:45
Anyway, I should go. I was just
heading home to do some work.

:37:48
- You coming?
- No, I'm gonna stay at Caroline's tonight.

:37:52
A little push, push in the bush.
:37:54
Donald, you're such a tard!
:37:58
See you, Charlie.
:38:04
To write about a flower,
to dramatize a flower...

:38:07
...I have to show the flower's arc.
:38:09
And the flower's arc stretches back
to the beginning of life.

:38:12
How did this flower get here?
What was its journey?

:38:16
Therefore, I should infer
from analogy...

:38:21
...that probably all the organic beings
which have ever lived on this Earth...

:38:25
...have descended
from some one primordial form...

:38:30
...into which life was first breathed.
:38:33
It is a journey of evolution.
Adaptation.

:38:36
The journey we all take. A journey
that unites each and every one of us.

:38:40
Darwin writes that we all come
from the very first single-cell organism.

:38:44
Yet here I am.
:38:45
And there's Laroche.
There's Orlean.

:38:48
And there's the ghost orchid.
All trapped in our own bodies...

:38:51
...in moments in history.
That's it.

:38:55
That's what I need to do.
Tie all of history together.


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